Untitled Document
At the beginning of the Iraq war, the UN entrusted $23bn of Iraqi money
to the US-led coalition to redevelop the country. With the infrastructure of
the country still in ruins, where has all that money gone? Callum Macrae and
Ali Fadhil on one of the greatest financial scandals of all time
In a dilapidated maternity and paediatric hospital in Diwaniyah, 100 miles south
of Baghdad, Zahara and Abbas, premature twins just two days old, lie desperately
ill. The hospital has neither the equipment nor the drugs that could save their
lives. On the other side of the world, in a federal courthouse in Virginia,
US, two men - one a former CIA agent and Republican candidate for Congress,
the other a former army ranger - are found guilty of fraudulently obtaining
$3m (£1.7m) intended for the reconstruction of Iraq. These two events
have no direct link, but they are none the less products of the same thing:
a financial scandal that in terms of sheer scale must rank as one of the greatest
in history.
At the start of the Iraq war, around $23bn-worth of Iraqi money was
placed in the trusteeship of the US-led coalition by the UN. The money, known
as the Development Fund for Iraq and consisting of the proceeds of oil sales,
frozen Iraqi bank accounts and seized Iraqi assets, was to be used in a "transparent
manner", specified the UN, for "purposes benefiting the people of
Iraq".
For the past few months we have been working on a Guardian Films investigation
into what happened to that money. What we discovered was that a great deal of
it has been wasted, stolen or frittered away. For the coalition, it has been
a catastrophe of its own making. For the Iraqi people, it has been a tragedy.
But it is also a financial and political scandal that runs right to the heart
of the nightmare that is engulfing Iraq today.
Diwaniyah is a sprawling and neglected city with just one small state paediatric
and maternity hospital to serve its one million people. Years of war, corruption
under Saddam and western sanctions have reduced the hospital to penury, so when
last year the Americans promised total refurbishment, the staff were elated.
But the renovation has been partial and the work often shoddy, and where it
really matters - funding frontline health care - there appears to have been
little change at all.
In the corridor, an anxious father who has been told his son may have meningitis
is berating the staff. "I want a good hospital, not a terrible hospital
that makes my child worse," he says. But then he calms down. "I'm
not blaming you, we are the same class. I'm talking about important people.
Those controlling all those millions and the oil. They didn't come here to save
us from Saddam, they came here for the oil, and so now the oil is stolen and
we got nothing from it." Beside him another parent, a woman, agrees: "If
the people who run the country are stealing the money, what can we do?"
For these ordinary Iraqis, it is clear that the country's wealth is being managed
in much the same way as it ever was. How did it all go so wrong?
When the coalition troops arrived in Iraq, they were received with remarkable
goodwill by significant sections of the population. The coalition had control
up to a point and, perhaps more importantly, it had the money to consolidate
that goodwill by rebuilding Iraq, or at least make a significant start. Best
of all for the US and its allies, the money came from the Iraqis themselves.
Because the Iraqi banking system was in tatters, the funds were placed in an
account with the Federal Reserve in New York. From there, most of the money
was flown in cash to Baghdad. Over the first 14 months of the occupation, 363
tonnes of new $100 bills were shipped in - $12bn, in cash. And that is where
it all began to go wrong.
"Iraq was awash in cash - in dollar bills. Piles and piles of
money," says Frank Willis, a former senior official with the governing
Coalition Provisional Authority. "We played football with some of the bricks
of $100 bills before delivery. It was a wild-west crazy atmosphere, the likes
of which none of us had ever experienced."
The environment created by the coalition positively encouraged corruption.
"American law was suspended, Iraqi law was suspended, and Iraq basically
became a free fraud zone," says Alan Grayson, a Florida-based attorney
who represents whistleblowers now trying to expose the corruption. "In
a free fire zone you can shoot at anybody you want. In a free fraud zone you
can steal anything you like. And that was what they did."
A good example was the the Iraqi currency exchange programme (Ice). An early
priority was to devote enormous resources to replacing every single Iraqi dinar
showing Saddam's face with new ones that didn't. The contract to help
distribute the new currency was won by Custer Battles, a small American security
company set up by Scott Custer and former Republican Congressional candidate
Mike Battles. Under the terms of the contract, they would invoice the coalition
for their costs and charge 25% on top as profit. But Custer Battles also set
up fake companies to produce inflated invoices, which were then passed on to
the Americans. They might have got away with it, had they not left a copy of
an internal spreadsheet behind after a meeting with coalition officials.
The spreadsheet showed the company's actual costs in one column and their invoiced
costs in another; it revealed, in one instance, that it had charged
$176,000 to build a helipad that actually cost $96,000. In fact, there was no
end to Custer Battles' ingenuity. For example, when the firm found abandoned
Iraqi Airways fork-lifts sitting in Baghdad airport, it resprayed them and rented
them to the coalition for thousands of dollars. In total, in return for $3m
of actual expenditure, Custer Battles invoiced for $10m. Perhaps more remarkable
is that the US government, once it knew about the scam, took no legal action
to recover the money. It has been left to private individuals to pursue
the case, the first stage of which concluded two weeks ago when Custer Battles
was ordered to pay more than $10m in damages and penalties.
But this is just one story among many. From one US controlled vault in a former
Saddam palace, $750,000 was stolen. In another, a safe was left open. In one
case, two American agents left Iraq without accounting for nearly $1.5m.
Perhaps most puzzling of all is what happened as the day approached for the
handover of power (and the remaining funds) to the incoming Iraqi interim government.
Instead of carefully conserving the Iraqi money for the new government, the
Coalition Provisional Authority went on an extraordinary spending spree. Some
$5bn was committed or spent in the last month alone, very little of it adequately
accounted for.
One CPA official was given nearly $7m and told to spend it in seven
days. "He told our auditors that he felt that there was more emphasis
on the speed of spending the money than on the accountability for that money,"
says Ginger Cruz, the deputy inspector general for Iraqi reconstruction. Not
all coalition officials were so honest. Last month Robert Stein Jr, employed
as a CPA comptroller in south central Iraq, despite a previous conviction for
fraud, pleaded guilty to conspiring to steal more than $2m and taking kickbacks
in the form of cars, jewellery, cash and sexual favours. It seems certain he
is only the tip of the iceberg. There are a further 50 criminal investigations
under way.
Back in Diwaniyah it is a story about failure and incompetence, rather than
fraud and corruption. Zahara and Abbas, born one and a half months premature,
are suffering from respiratory distress syndrome and are desperately ill. The
hospital has just 14 ancient incubators, held together by tape and wire.
Zahara is in a particularly bad way. She needs a ventilator and drugs to help
her breathe, but the hospital has virtually nothing. Her father has gone into
town to buy vitamin K on the black market, which he has been told his children
will need. Zahara starts to deteriorate and in desperation the doctor holds
a tube pumping unregulated oxygen against the child's nostrils. "This treatment
is worse than primitive," he says. "It's not even medicine."
Despite his efforts, the little girl dies; the next day her brother also dies.
Yet with the right equipment and the right drugs, they could have survived.
How is it possible that after three years of occupation and billions of dollars
of spending, hospitals are still short of basic supplies? Part of the cause
is ideological tunnel-vision. For months before the war the US state department
had been drawing up plans for the postwar reconstruction, but those plans were
junked when the Pentagon took over.
To supervise the reconstruction of the Iraqi health service, the Pentagon appointed
James Haveman, a former health administrator from Michigan. He was also a loyal
Bush supporter, who had campaigned for Jeb Bush, and a committed evangelical
Christian. But he had virtually no experience in international health work.
The coalition's health programme was by any standards a failure. Basic equipment
and drugs should have been distributed within months - the coalition wouldn't
even have had to pay for it. But they missed that chance, not just in health,
but in every other area of life in Iraq. As disgruntled Iraqis will often point
out, despite far greater devastation and crushing sanctions, Saddam did more
to rebuild Iraq in six months after the first Gulf war than the coalition has
managed in three years.
Kees Reitfield, a health professional with 20 years' experience in post-conflict
health care from Kosovo to Somalia, was in Iraq from the very beginning of the
war and looked on in astonishment at the US management in its aftermath. "Everybody
in Iraq was ready for three months' chaos," he says. "They had water
for three months, they had food for three months, they were ready to wait for
three months. I said, we've got until early August to show an improvement, some
drugs in the health centres, some improvement of electricity in the grid, some
fuel prices going down. Failure to deliver will mean civil unrest." He
was right.
Of course, no one can say that if the Americans had got the reconstruction
right it would have been enough. There were too many other mistakes as well,
such as a policy of crude "deBa'athification" that saw Iraqi expertise
marginalised, the creation of a sectarian government and the Americans attempting
to foster friendship with Iraqis who themselves had no friends among other Iraqis.
Another experienced health worker, Mary Patterson - who was eventually asked
to leave Iraq by James Haveman - characterises the Coalition's approach thus:
"I believe it had a lot to do with showing that the US was in control,"
she says. "I believe that it had to do with rewarding people that were
politically loyal. So rather than being a technical agenda, I believe it was
largely a politically motivated reward-and-punishment kind of agenda."
Which sounds like the way Saddam used to run the country. "If you were
to interview Iraqis today about what they see day to day," she says, "I
think they will tell you that they don't see a lot of difference".
· Dispatches: Iraq's Missing Billions produced by GuardianFilms
is broadcast tonight on Channel4 at 8pm.